Guest guest Posted February 18, 2003 Report Share Posted February 18, 2003 Hm. Doesn't make me suspicious. I think the dogma or common link of belief would be the acceptance of a higher power or a god. I might be wrong though. Humanism is atheistic so that would be the difference. I used to frequent religion debate forums and found them both interesting and informative when people discussing the subject could remain civil and kind. Unfortunately this was all too rare and I soon tired of the process and began reading the subjects that interested me on my own. ~ PT ~ Dare to be naive. ~ Buckminster Fuller ~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~~~~~~~~> , The Stewarts <stews9@c...> wrote: > Then what makes it Quakerism, per se, as opposed to, say, secular humanism? > No one has yet adequately explained what special quality or set of > qualities makes for a Quaker, if indeed they encourage free-thinking. > There has to be a common link, some shared basic, and in this we shall > find the dogma. > That they assiduously avoid mentioning their dogma leads one to suspicions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 18, 2003 Report Share Posted February 18, 2003 Hello, I think Quakerism started and still is Christian. When I went to a Friends Church 20 years ago in Long Beach, Ca. they used Bibles. The fact is most Christian Churches today do not stick to the literal word, as Harold Camping of Family Radio would tell you by the way. The for example would be that the Bible forbids homosexuality but now they sort of overlook those scriptures and try to make it more humanistic which God himself might not necessarily be. Jack S.--- On Tue 02/18, ~ P_T ~ & lt; patchouli_troll & gt; wrote: ~ P_T ~ [ patchouli_troll]To: : Tue, 18 Feb 2003 17:03:01 -0000Subject: Re: Suspicious mindsHm. Doesn't make me suspicious. I think the dogma orcommon link of belief would be the acceptance of a higher power or a god. I might be wrong though.Humanism is atheistic so that would be the difference.I used to frequent religion debate forums and found themboth interesting and informative when people discussing thesubject could remain civil and kind. Unfortunately this was alltoo rare and I soon tired of the process and began reading thesubjects that interested me on my own. ~ PT ~Dare to be naive.~ Buckminster Fuller~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~*~~~~~~~~~~ & gt;--- In , The Stewarts wrote: & gt; Then what makes it Quakerism, per se, as opposed to, say, secular humanism? & gt; No one has yet adequately explained what special quality or set of & gt; qualities makes for a Quaker, if indeed they encouragefree-thinking. & gt; There has to be a common link, some shared basic, and in this weshall & gt; find the dogma. & gt; That they assiduously avoid mentioning their dogma leads one to suspicions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 18, 2003 Report Share Posted February 18, 2003 - " Jack Styger " <selenasking Wednesday, February 19, 2003 4:26 AM Re: Suspicious minds > Hello, I think Quakerism started and still is Christian. It started with Christianity, but how Christian it still is depends on where one goes, what the feeling of the Meeting in question is, if you follow. Many people do refer to their Quakerism as Christian. I don't, but that is mostly because I don't find certain aspects of Christianity, which many Christians find important (the Virgin Birth, the Resurrection, and so on), don't mean anything to me. As well, Quakers tend, in my experience, to believe that there is truth in all religions - one could certainly be a Buddhist Quaker, if one felt so drawn, for example. However, whether or not it is a Christian religion does not speak to the question of dogma, IMO. > When I went to a Friends Church 20 years ago in Long Beach, Ca. they used Bibles. Bibles will appear in many Quaker meeting houses and people will use them for inspiration, however, there may also be books from other religions equally available and used. > The fact is most Christian Churches today do not stick to the literal word, This is true enough. Lee-Gwen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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